Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lecture 2 The Science of Psychology
Advertisements

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 1 Psychology as a Science Theory development involves collecting interrelated ideas and observations Taken.
Research Basics PE 357. What is Research? Can be diverse General definition is “finding answers to questions in an organized and logical and systematic.
OVERVIEW OF RESEARCH METHODS l How are Research Methods Important? How are Research Methods Important? l What is Descriptive Research? What is Descriptive.
The Methods of Social Psychology
Statistics for the Social Sciences Psychology 340 Spring 2005 Statistics & Research Methods.
Statistics for the Social Sciences
OVERVIEW OF RESEARCH METHODS
Chapter 1 Conducting & Reading Research Baumgartner et al Chapter 1 Nature and Purpose of Research.
Chapter One: The Science of Psychology
Chapter One: The Science of Psychology. Ways to Acquire Knowledge Tenacity Tenacity Refers to the continued presentation of a particular bit of information.
Education 793 Class Notes Welcome! 3 September 2003.
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics Psychology
Statistics for the Social Sciences Psychology 340 Spring 2009 Review of SPSS basics.
MODULE 3 INVESTIGATING HUMAN AND SOCIL DEVELOPMENT IN THE CARIBBEAN.
The Scientific Method in Psychology.  Descriptive Studies: naturalistic observations; case studies. Individuals observed in their environment.  Correlational.
Techniques of research control: -Extraneous variables (confounding) are: The variables which could have an unwanted effect on the dependent variable under.
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics Psychology 138 Spring 2015.
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics Psychology 138 Spring 2015.
CHAPTER 2 Research Methods in Industrial/Organizational Psychology
Statistics for the Social Sciences Psychology 340 Spring 2010 Introductions & Review of some basic research methods.
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics Psychology
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics Psychology
Research for Nurses: Methods and Interpretation Chapter 1 What is research? What is nursing research? What are the goals of Nursing research?
Aim: What factors must we consider to make an experimental design?
The population in a statistical study is the entire group of individuals about which we want information The population is the group we want to study.
The Psychologist as Detective, 4e by Smith/Davis © 2007 Pearson Education Chapter One: The Science of Psychology.
Research in Psychology Chapter Two 8-10% of Exam AP Psychology.
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics Psychology
Research Methods Systematic procedures for planning research, gathering and interpreting data, and reporting research findings.
Research Design
Some Terminology experiment vs. correlational study IV vs. DV descriptive vs. inferential statistics sample vs. population statistic vs. parameter H 0.
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Approaches to social research Lerum
Literature Reviews and Research Overview
“Tell me and I'll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I'll understand.”
“Tell me and I'll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I'll understand.”
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Experimental Psychology PSY 433
Statistics: Chapter 1.
CHAPTER 2 Research Methods in Industrial/Organizational Psychology
Overview of Statistics
DUET.
Experimental Psychology PSY 433
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Lesson Overview 1.1 What Is Science?.
Scientific Methods Science in Practice.
1-1 What is Science? What Science Is and Is Not
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Research in Psychology
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Scientific Method.
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Two Halves to Statistics
Research Design Research Methodology and Methods of Social Inquiry
Research in Psychology Chapter Two 8-10% of Exam
Research Methods & Statistics
The Scientific Method and Experimental Design
Chap. 1: Introduction to Statistics
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Psychology = the scientific study of behavior and mental processes
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Designing Experimental Investigations
Psychological Experimentation
Presentation transcript:

Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics Spring 2017

What are Statistics? “It’s about almost everything in modern society.” Bennett, Briggs, Triola (2003), Statistical Reasoning for Everyday life Examples of stocks, sports, weather World o meters Fun Facts Live Science What are Statistics?

What are Statistics? “It’s about almost everything in modern society.” Bennett, Briggs, Triola (2003), Statistical Reasoning for Everyday life Statistics: tools, used to make data based decisions Descriptive statistics Inferential statistics Data: numbers with a context How were numbers measured, what do they mean? Examples of stocks, sports, weather What are Statistics?

“The world of statistics starts with a question, not with data” Keller 2006, Tao of Statistics Traditional knowing: truth or error Assumes perfect uniformity Assumes error-free repetitions Modern knowing: probabilistic Assumes variability Our focus: Scientific Method Systematic observation (& experimentation) used to explain how and why events occur Systematic observations constitute data Statistics are used to describe data & relationships within data T r u T r u t h Ways of knowing “Alternative facts” “Truthiness”

“The world of statistics starts with a question, not with data” Keller 2006, Tao of Statistics Scientific Method Ask research question Identify variables and formulate hypotheses Define population Select research methodology Collect data from sample Analyze data Draw conclusions based on data Repeat Statistics A process The research process

An Example Claim: Absence makes the heart grow fonder But, what about your observation that long distance romances never work out? (Out of sight, out of mind) ?? How to test the claim scientifically? What data do we collect? Who to test? How do we make our observations? An Example

Variables What data do we collect? Identify what we are studying Characteristics or conditions that change or have different values for different individuals (or situations) Independent (explanatory) variables (IV) Variable that has causal impact In experiment, variable that is manipulated by researcher Dependent (response) variable (DV) Variable observed for changes to assess effect of the manipulation in an experiment Variables measured in observational research Variables

Independent and Dependent Variables Absence makes the heart grow fonder What are some potential Independent (explanatory) variables? How long apart? How far apart? How much communication? How “strong” was the relationship to begin with (quasi-independent)? What are some potential Dependent (response) variables? Ratings of fondness for partner Heart rate when seeing a picture of partner fMRI of brain when hearing partner’s voice ?? Independent and Dependent Variables

Experimental Unit What is the level at which the research is focused? Individuals Between individuals Within individuals Across groups Couples Families Cities Ethnic groups Our example: Absence makes the heart grow fonder What level(s) could we focus on? Experimental Unit

Observing participants (getting data) What data do we collect? Who to test? Population Set of all individuals of interest Typically no access to whole population Sample Subset of population data collected from Inferential Statistics: Test sample & generalize results to population as a whole Observing participants (getting data)

Basic Research Methods Absence makes the heart grow fonder How could we go about testing this? What data should we collect? Who to test? How should we make our observations? Observational study (Explanatory and Response variables) Observe & measure variables of interest to find relationships No attempt to manipulate or influence responses Experimental methodology (Independent and Dependent variables) Independent variable manipulated while changes observed in another variable (dependent) Can establish cause-and-effect relationships Extensive controls to minimize extraneous sources of variability Quasi-Experimental methodology One (or more) of the independent variables is a pre-existing characteristic (e.g., sex, age, etc.) Basic Research Methods

“The world of statistics starts with a question, not with data” Keller 2006, Tao of Statistics Statistics: tools, used to make data based decisions Data: numbers with a context Understanding the context in which the observations are made is critical for both doing statistical analyses as well as interpreting the results. e.g., How were numbers measured? Who did they come from? What do they mean? Examples of stocks, sports, weather What are Statistics?

Learning the basics of SPSS including entering data Today’s Lab

Brief tour of SPSS To switch between the Two view windows: views click on the tabs Two view windows: Brief tour of SPSS

This is where you specify the details about the variables Each row corresponds to a variable Each column corresponds to a feature of the variables The Variable View

The Data View Each row corresponds to an experimental unit (called “cases” in SPSS lingo) Each column corresponds to a variable So each column in the data view corresponds to a row in the variable view The Data View